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[ecrea] ICA pre-conf deadline 15.12
Tue Dec 11 21:31:55 GMT 2012
Call for Papers
Audiences, elsewhere?
Reviewing the applicability of audiences and audience research to those
in other fields
A pre-conference at ICA 2013 co-organized by the Audience and Reception
Studies section of ECREA
and the COST Action IS0906 Transforming Audiences, Transforming
Societies, and presented in collaboration with ICA Division for
Communication and Technology
Hosted by the University of Leicester
June 17th, 2013
Please visit our website at http://www.audienceselsewhere.wordpress.com
Opening keynote address: Professor Kirsten Drotner, Institute of
Literature, Culture and Media Studies, University of Southern Denmark
and founding director of DREAM: Danish Research Centre on Education and
Advanced Media Materials.
Closing keynote address: Professor Sonia Livingstone, Department of
Media and Communications at London School of Economics and Political
Science, director of EU Kids Online network.
Submissions are invited in a range of two possible formats for an
exciting pre-conference titled ‘Audiences, Elsewhere?’ to be held on the
eve of the 2013 annual conference of the ICA. The pre-conference will be
hosted by the Department of Media and Communications at the University
of Leicester on 17th June 2013. The pre-conference features addresses by
Professor Sonia Livingstone and Professor Kirsten Drotner, with an
intensive, innovative and interactive format for discussing audience
research throughout the day.
Intellectual scope - More than five decades after the theoretical and
empirical appearance of in communications research, it seems apt to ask
what, if at all, the idea of audiences and the insights from reception
studies might imply for those elsewhere. Caught up in internal debates
about establishing the role of the reader, countering and then
qualifying the narrative of powerful media effects, over-celebrating
diversity, accumulating too much empirical work at the expense of
theoretical advancement, and lately, the advent of users and produsers –
audience research has seldom had the chance to (re)consider its
applicability and utility for other fields. Some of these links
‘elsewhere’ have already been theorised by audience researchers –
consider the public or the citizen from democratic participation theory.
Consider also, how the text-reader metaphor that lies at the heart of
audience reception becomes a tool worthy of interest in the face of
discussions about
technologies as texts or the affordances and appropriation of
technologies. But there are other links waiting to be unpicked – how
best might the audience (a media-framed concept) and insights from
reception research inform, for instance, education studies, tourism,
sociologies of the family? Such a line of questioning places the
tradition of audience research into a direct dialogue with other
trajectories communication scholars walk on.
We suggest that reviewing the applicability of audience research to
those outside communication studies is an important task for two
overlapping reasons. First, in intellectual terms, indeed, there is a
danger in not engaging with these questions, for these fields,
‘elsewhere’ often assume the audience to be homogenous, singular, or
even passive – an ironical fact after the last fifty years of
theoretical advancements in audience studies, which have proved
otherwise. Second, in more socio-economic terms, audience researchers
are often called upon to inform policy, a task in which we must convey
the justification for our agenda to economists, political scientists,
sociologists, educators and others. This should make us question as to
what we must cross-fertilise for these bridges to be built, which
insights shall not prove to be useful. And so, Audiences, Elsewhere
brings together keynote speakers from both within and outside the field
of academic audience research and
p
roposes
a work-in-progress format where the latest research can be discussed
with aim to look at what may be useful for ‘elsewhere’.
Paper submission guidelines- Research will be presented in a more
interactive fashion than in usual conferences. Hence, we will be
offering two formats for presentations over the day.
Participants can choose to make submissions for both formats. However,
to encourage diversity and spread we will include only one submission
per participant as a first author. You should clearly indicate in your
proposal text which of the two formats your submission targets.
1. Guidelines for submission to *the roundtable component* – This format
will involve a roundtable discussion where presenters are requested to
present one concept of value from their work with media audiences which
they believe are of utility to scholars elsewhere. Presenters are
encouraged to focus particularly on developing potential linkages with
democracy and participation, science and technology studies, education
studies, media policy, travel and tourism, politics and government, and
other fields as they choose.
a. For this format, participants are required to clearly indicate what
concept they will focus on from their work.
b. Submissions of up to 300 words, clearly elucidating the concept, and
how it links audience research with a field of their choice, are invited.
c. Submissions will be judged on conceptual clarity and a real attempt
to build bridges between audience research and other areas of media and
communications studies or indeed, other social sciences
d. Please also include a 75 word biography with your submission
2. *Work in progress component* – This format includes brief
presentations of latest/on-going audience research, which demonstrates
strong existing or potential linkages with other areas of research,
outside audience studies. Presenters are to focus key ideas of their
current research from the perspective of their relevance and
applicability in terms of delivering insights to other fields. We are
looking for the latest audience research, which demonstrates
methodological rigour, and a strong demonstration of existing or
potential linkages with other areas of research, outside audience studies.
a. For this format, participants are required to clearly indicate the
key questions, methods and theoretical frameworks they are using in
their projects
b. Submissions of up to 300 words, clearly demonstrating how the
research builds links between audience studies with a field of their
choice, are invited.
c. Submissions will be judged on conceptual clarity and a real attempt
to build bridges between audience research and other areas of media and
communications studies or indeed, other social sciences
d. Please also include a 75 word biography with your submission
Deadlines and schedules – Please submit abstracts by 15th December 2012
to (audienceselsewhere /at/ gmail.com) in order to reach the conference team.
Notification of acceptance will be made by 31st January 2013. The
pre-conference will be held on 17th June 2013. Registration will be at 9
am, the proceedings of the day will be concluded by 15.40 pm enabling
participants to take the train back to reach Central London soon after 5
pm, in time for the opening session of the ICA conference.
Costs and venue – The event will be held at the Charles Wilson building
of the University of Leicester. The University of Leicester is home to
the Centre for Mass Communications Research which has had an important
role to play in the country’s media and communications scene in the
past. The Department of Media and Communications is a lively and big
department with a number of faculty members intellectually committed to
audience research and thus the pre-conference enjoys a high amount of
support at Leicester.
Transport on East Midlands Trains – the fastest route between Leicester
and London will be pre-arranged for participants so that they can avail
of the best possible prices owing to a group booking, and they reach
central London well in time for the ICA Plenary at the end of the
pre-conference. The journey should take approximately one hour from
London’s St Pancras Station. The venue at Leicester is located at a
convenient walking distance, or a short bus ride from the railway station.
A conference fee of $50 will be required to attend this pre conference.
This covers conference materials, three coffee breaks, a 2 course buffet
lunch and the train travel from Leicester to London. In case
participants do not wish to book the train ticket back to London through
the group booking scheme via the organisers, the conference fee is $30.
Organising teams
ECREA organising team: Pille Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt, Ranjana Das, Jakob Bjur
COST organising team: Geoffroy Patriarche, Helena Bilandzic and the
Steering Group of the COST Action IS0906
ICA Division for Communication and Technology: Lee Kwan, James Danowski
and Lee Humphreys
Local organising team: Ranjana Das, Peter Lunt and the University of
Leicester Department of Media and Communications
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